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잠비아 내 요거트 수출 공급업체 인텔리전스, 가격 추이 및 무역 흐름
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잠비아 내 요거트의 연간 수출 금액, 물량 및 공급업체 시장 규모 (HS 코드 040320)
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연도
물량
금액
2023
13,155
19,235 USD
2022
1,557,264
1,187,356 USD
잠비아의 요거트 수입 바이어 인텔리전스 및 가격 시그널: 바이어, 수요, 거래 파트너
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잠비아 내 요거트의 연간 수입 금액, 물량 및 수요 규모 (HS 코드 040320)
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연도
물량
금액
2023
1,158,672
1,710,690 USD
2022
544,651
836,700 USD
Classification
Product TypeProcessed Food
Product FormChilled (Fermented Dairy)
Industry PositionValue-Added Dairy Product
Market
Yogurt in Zambia is supplied through a mix of domestic processing and regional imports, with chilled distribution concentrated in major urban corridors (notably Lusaka/Copperbelt retail and wholesale channels). Domestic producers such as Zambeef’s Zammilk include yoghurt and drinking yoghurt in their dairy portfolio, while regional suppliers (e.g., Kefalos via a Zambian distributor) are also present in the market. Raw milk availability is anchored by Zambia’s dairy belt, with Southern Province identified by government as the largest milk-producing province. Market access conditions are shaped by tariff preferences under SADC and, at times, animal-health import permit suspensions affecting dairy products from key regional origins.
Market RoleDomestic producer with import supplementation and some regional exports
Domestic RoleUrban consumer dairy category supplied by integrated processors and import distributors with cold-chain capability
Specification
Physical Attributes
Coagulated fermented dairy product (set or stirred texture depending on processing and formulation).
Compositional Metrics
Yoghurt standard: not less than 8.5% milk solids-not-fat and not less than 2.0% milk fat.
Non-fat yoghurt standard: not more than 0.5% milk fat and not less than 8.5% milk solids-not-fat.
Supply Chain
Value Chain
Milk production and collection/aggregation → pasteurisation → culture inoculation and fermentation → cooling → packaging → chilled distribution to retail/wholesale
Temperature
Cold-chain handling is required for yoghurt; products commonly specify refrigerated storage (e.g., 1–5°C guidance for plain and smooth yoghurt ranges sold into the region).
Shelf Life
Shelf-life and quality are highly sensitive to cold-chain breaks during storage and distribution.
Freight IntensityMedium
Transport ModeLand
Risks
Regulatory Compliance HighAnimal-health controls can abruptly restrict dairy imports from key regional origins; in February 2026, Zambia suspended livestock import permits from South Africa and suspended permits for cloven-hoofed animal products (including dairy) unless strict mitigation measures are applied under the WOAH Terrestrial Animal Health Code framework.Before contracting South Africa-origin yoghurt, confirm current permit status and veterinary conditions with Zambia’s Department of Veterinary Services; diversify approved origins and use products/processing pathways that meet any permitted mitigation requirements.
Logistics HighExtended electricity load-shedding increases cold-chain failure risk for chilled yoghurt storage and distribution, raising the likelihood of spoilage, stock-outs, and non-conformance in retail channels.Require temperature monitoring and backup power (generator/solar + battery) at chilled warehouses and retail DCs; validate reefer truck uptime and contingency routing.
Food Safety MediumNon-conformance with Zambia’s yoghurt compositional/process standards (pasteurisation before cultures; minimum milk solids-not-fat and milk fat thresholds; permitted additive classes) can trigger enforcement action or market withdrawal.Maintain product specifications and COA aligned to Zambia’s legal yoghurt standard; verify labels/claims and additive compliance before import or domestic distribution.
Sustainability
Energy reliability and cold-chain energy intensity: drought-driven power deficits have resulted in extended load-shedding schedules, increasing spoilage risk and operating cost for chilled dairy logistics.
Climate variability affecting water availability and feed costs can indirectly affect milk supply and dairy processing economics.
Labor & Social
Informal milk marketing and limited quality control capacity can elevate food safety risks and undermine consistent farmer income; aggregation models emphasize chilled collection and testing to address this.
FAQ
What HS code and customs duty treatment applies to yogurt imports into Zambia?Zambia’s Trade Information Portal lists yoghurt under HS code 0403100000. The portal shows a 25% customs duty under the standard customs duty category and 0% duty for SADC categories when origin qualification is met.
What are the key legal composition requirements for yoghurt sold in Zambia?Zambian regulations define yoghurt as a coagulated pasteurised milk product produced by lactic acid fermentation, with pasteurisation required before cultures are added. The yoghurt standard specifies at least 8.5% milk solids-not-fat and at least 2.0% milk fat; non-fat yoghurt is capped at 0.5% milk fat while still requiring at least 8.5% milk solids-not-fat.
What is the biggest current trade disruption risk for sourcing yoghurt from South Africa into Zambia?In mid-February 2026, Zambia suspended livestock import permits from South Africa due to foot-and-mouth disease concerns and also suspended permits for cloven-hoofed animal products, including dairy, unless strict mitigation measures are applied. Importers should confirm current permit status and conditions before shipping South Africa-origin dairy.
Why is cold-chain resilience a major operational risk for yoghurt in Zambia?Yoghurt requires refrigeration (some regional product specifications state storage at 1–5°C), and Zambia has experienced extended load-shedding schedules linked to power deficits. If chilled warehousing or retail refrigeration loses power without backup, yoghurt quality can deteriorate quickly and lead to spoilage or withdrawals.